Chattanooga Times Free Press

Silverdale now under Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office,

- BY PAUL LEACH STAFF WRITER

It’s a new day for the Silverdale Correction­al Facility and CoreCivic, the contractor that operates it on behalf of Hamilton County.

On Wednesday, the Hamilton County Commission voted 8-0 to end Silverdale’s life as the county workhouse — transferri­ng control to the sheriff’s office and entering into a new agreement with the private correction­s provider. The move marks the first step in phasing out the downtown Chattanoog­a jail, with an eye toward expanding inmate capacity at Silverdale and reducing overcrowdi­ng.

The initial Silverdale expansion, which calls for an additional 128 beds, is expected to cost between $20 million and $30 million and was a factor in a tax increase also approved Wednesday by the county commission.

Before the commission voted, Commission­er Greg Martin asked Mayor Jim Coppinger to assure the commission of the “overwhelmi­ng necessity” for the measures.

Coppinger revealed some of the blunt individual discussion­s he had with commission­ers concerning their choices when it came to finding — and funding — viable jail solutions.

“It could be catastroph­ic in the fact that a federal judge could walk in here tomorrow and tell the commission it has three to five years to build a new jail or justice center,” Coppinger said.

When the county explored the cost of a whole new jail, that figure came out to $132 million, he said. To pay for that, the county would have to approve a tax hike about three times what it faced Wednesday.

As part of the new CoreCivic agreement, the county approved a general fund transfer of $15.5 million to the sheriff’s department, which is now responsibl­e for paying the company (formerly known as Correction­s Corporatio­n of America). In recent years, the CoreCivic costs to the county, based on the number of inmates held each day, ranged between $13 million and $14 million a year.

Coppinger has said the uptick in price comes down to increased salary costs for CoreCivic.

“We’re a victim of our own success,” Coppinger said in an earlier meeting, citing local economic conditions driving the need for increasing­ly competitiv­e salaries for the company.

Sheriff Jim Hammond, also in a previous meeting, described the plan as a way to avoid the mistake of making a highdollar commitment for what may turn out to be a shortterm solution, citing initiative­s seeking to divert mental health inmates from correction­al facilities. Such efforts have the potential to reduce the inmate population on the front end, he said.

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